QED VS lisperanto

Compare QED vs lisperanto and see what are their differences.

QED

NOW OBSOLETE. UTF-8/Unicode-aware port of Rob Pike's QED editor for Unix (by phonologus)

lisperanto

Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for programming; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for knowledge; Lisperanto is a spatial canvas for ideas; (by uprun)
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QED lisperanto
1 7
32 39
- -
2.7 0.0
3 months ago over 1 year ago
C JavaScript
- MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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QED

Posts with mentions or reviews of QED. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-08-06.
  • Ask HN: More “experimental“ UIs for editing/writing code?
    14 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 6 Aug 2022
    Not exactly "experimental", considering the Unix heritage, but -- line editors.

    "I've seen [visual] editors like that, but I don't feel a need for them. I don't want to see the state of the file when I'm editing." -- Ken Thompson, on the superiority of ed to visual editors. Summarized by Peter Salus in A Quarter Century of UNIX (Addison-Wesley, 1994).

    Definitely a blast from the past, but I do think line editors may force one to write simpler programs -- or to think in smaller chunks, as opposed to (doom)scrolling or moving about incrementally on a large screen.

    Rob Pike's sam editor has an interesting command language. You're not limited to thinking in "lines" as in ed or sed; rather, the whole file is a giant string that you manipulate using regular expressions, external pipes, etc: http://doc.cat-v.org/bell_labs/sam_lang_tutorial/sam_tut.pdf

    Its predecessor, qed, is also interesting, extremely powerful, but it seems to have a much steeper learning curve. I have used sam quite a bit, but not qed. https://github.com/phonologus/QED/raw/master/doc/qed-tutoria...

lisperanto

Posts with mentions or reviews of lisperanto. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-08-09.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing QED and lisperanto you can also consider the following projects:

metadesk

gtoolkit - Glamorous Toolkit is the Moldable Development environment. It empowers you to make systems explainable through experiences tailored for each problem.

om-sharp - OM#: Visual Programming | Computer-assisted Music Compositon

mps-code-reviewer - Code Review for JetBrains MPS providing integration with Bitbucket

impulse - Impossible Dev Tools for React and Tailwind

awesome-structure-editors - A list of projectional and structural editors

unit - Next Generation Visual Programming System

antimony - CAD from a parallel universe

glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust

knowledge_base - A place for learning, a place for fun. A place to come, to get things done.

ideas - a hundred ideas for computing - a record of ideas - https://samsquire.github.io/ideas/